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Notable New     Yorkers
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Frances PerkinsFrances Perkins
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storekeepers. They didn't just brazen their way through. They always gave a nearby looking tough their coat to hold or asked him whether he'd mind holding the banner or something of that sort, to keep them busy, but on their side. It was a trick they'd learned in suffrage campaigning and they continued it.

They also learned in suffrage campaigning the great value of the small town in politics and the great significance of the rural population. They also learned that you had to go right to them. You couldn't send dodgers through the mail. They didn't read pamphlets that came through the mail. That didn't do any good. But to see a few women and speak with them would make more difference than a thousand dodgers.

They organized themselves in teams and got a lot of younger women to do the same thing. They got an automobile and they went here, there and everywhere. They went to see leading women in the community - went to call on them. They asked the ladies of the First Baptist Church to let them speak at their strawberry festival. They were always so nice, polite and friendly that they never made a disturbance.

At any rate, this woman's committee and this woman's organization was working. That was a new element - a very new element. They were bringing into politics an element of the population that never before publicly had been in it.





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